The fate of mesenchymal stem cells transplanted into immunocompetent neonatal mice: implications for skeletal gene therapy via stem cells.
Journal
  Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy.
Citation
  Mol Ther. 9(6):955-63
Publication date
  2004 Jun
Authors
  Niyibizi C
Wang S
Mi Z
Robbins PD
Investigators
  Christopher Niyibizi
Shuwen Wang
Grant agencies
  National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases
Grants
  NIAMS R01 AR049688
MeSH headings
  Bone Diseases
Gene Therapy
Mesenchymal Stem Cell Transplantation
MeSH qualifiers
  therapy
methods
Abstract
  To explore the feasibility of skeletal gene and cell therapies, we transduced murine bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) with a retrovirus carrying the enhanced green fluorescent protein and zeocin-resistance genes prior to transplantation into 2-day-old immunocompetent neonatal mice. Whole-body imaging of the recipient mice at 7 days post-systemic cell injection demonstrated a wide distribution of the cells in vivo. Twenty-five days posttransplantation, most of the infused cells were present in the lung as assessed by examination of the cells cultured from the lungs of the recipient mice. The cells persisted in lung and maintained a high level of gene expression and could be recovered from the recipient mice at 150 days after cell transplantation. A significant number of GFP-positive cells were also present in the bones of the recipient mice at 35 days post-cell transplantation. Recycling of the cells recovered from femurs of the recipient mice at 25 days posttransplantation by repeated injections into different neonatal mice resulted in the isolation of a clone of cells that was detected in bone and cartilage, but not in lung and liver after systemic injection. These data demonstrate that MSCs persist in immunocompetent neonatal mice, maintain a high level of gene expression, and may participate in skeletal growth and development of the recipient animals.